Science & Technology

An ancient earthquake changed the course of the Ganges River

India’s Ganges River shifted abruptly due to a distant yet massive earthquake around 2,500 years ago, new geologic evidence suggests.…

‘Do I Know You?’ explores face blindness and the science of the mind

Do I Know You?Sadie DingfelderLittle, Brown Spark, $32 A friend and I recently stumbled into a conversation about inner monologues.…

Stunning trilobite fossils include soft tissues never seen before

Paleontologists studying rocks from Morocco have unearthed the most exquisitely preserved trilobite fossils yet discovered. The new lifelike fossils update…

Calling gun violence a public health crisis is a ‘first step’ to fight it 

For the first time in history, a United States surgeon general has formally declared gun violence a public health crisis. …

Ancient Egyptian scribes’ work left its mark on their skeletons

Ancient Egyptian scribes’ life works are written on their bones. Arthritis and other damage mark the scribes’ skeletons where the…

The last woolly mammoths offer new clues to why the species went extinct

Four thousand years ago, on an island off the coast of what is now Siberia, the world’s last woolly mammoth…

In ‘Warming Up,’ the sports world’s newest opponent is climate change

Warming UpMadeleine OrrBloomsbury Sigma, $28 It’s easy to think of sports as an escape from reality, removed from the glaring…

We may finally know the source of mysterious high-energy neutrinos

Supermassive black holes at the hearts of active galaxies may be churning out a lot of the universe’s high-energy neutrinos.…

Honeybees can “smell” lung cancer

Float like a butterfly, sniff out cancer like a bee? Honeybees can detect the subtle scents of lung cancer in…

Something weird is happening to Earth’s inner core

Something strange is happening at Earth’s center. Decades of earthquake data show that Earth’s inner core has been rotating slower…